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Metastasectomy

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Metastasectomy: Basics - Goal-Oriented Snipping

  • Definition: Surgical excision of metastatic lesions.
  • Primary Aim: Improve overall survival (OS); potential cure in oligometastases.
  • Other Aims: Symptom palliation, diagnosis, local control.
  • Core Principle: Achieve complete R0 resection (microscopically negative margins).
  • Crucial Selection Factors:
    • Primary tumor controlled.
    • Patient fit for major surgery (ECOG 0-1).
    • Resectable metastatic disease (number, location).
    • Longer disease-free interval (DFI) often favorable.

⭐ Complete (R0) resection is the most significant prognostic factor for survival after metastasectomy.

Patient Selection Criteria - Picking Prime Patients

  • Primary Tumor: Controlled or controllable (no active local disease).
  • Metastases:
    • Resectable with clear margins (R0 resection is the goal).
    • Limited number (oligometastases, typically defined as ≤ 3-5 lesions).
    • No widespread, unresectable disease elsewhere.
  • Patient Status:
    • Good performance status (e.g., ECOG 0-1, Karnofsky >70).
    • Adequate organ function to tolerate major surgery.
  • Timing & Biology:
    • Longer Disease-Free Interval (DFI) from primary treatment (e.g., > 12-24 months preferred).
    • Slow tumor doubling time.

⭐ For pulmonary metastasectomy, a DFI > 36 months, a single metastasis, and complete (R0) resection are strong positive prognostic factors.

Site-Specific Metastasectomy - Hotspot Hitlist

  • Liver (Hepatic):
    • Common for CRC. Key: R0 resection, Future Liver Remnant (FLR >20-25% normal, >30-40% chemo-exposed).
    • Parenchymal-sparing preferred.

    ⭐ For CRC liver metastases, 5-year survival post-resection can reach 40-50%.

  • Lung (Pulmonary):
    • For CRC, sarcoma, RCC. Key: Primary controlled, R0 resection, pulmonary reserve (FEV1 >1L or >30-40% pred).
    • Wedge resection common, VATS ideal.
  • Brain:
    • Solitary/few lesions, controlled primary.
    • Often + Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS)/Whole Brain Radiotherapy (WBRT).
    • Primaries: Lung, breast, melanoma.
  • Peritoneum (CRS):
    • For peritoneal surface disease (CRC, ovarian, appendiceal).
    • Goal: Complete cytoreduction (CC-0/CC-1). Often + HIPEC.
  • Adrenal:
    • Isolated metastasis (e.g., lung, RCC).
    • Laparoscopic adrenalectomy if feasible.

Metastasectomy and other treatments by site

Prognosis & Combined Therapy - Future Factors & Friends

  • Prognostic Factors (Influence Outcomes):
    • Favorable (Friends):
      • Long Disease-Free Interval (DFI > 12-24 months).
      • Solitary or few metastases (e.g., < 3-5).
      • Complete (R0) resection achievable.
      • Primary tumor type (e.g., Colorectal CRC, Renal RCC).
      • Good patient performance status (ECOG 0-1).
    • Unfavorable (Foes): Short DFI, multiple/bilateral mets, incomplete resection (R1/R2), aggressive tumor biology.
  • Combined Therapy (Synergy for Success):
    • Systemic Therapy: Chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy.
      • Neoadjuvant: To downstage, assess tumor biology.
      • Adjuvant: Eradicate micrometastases, improve DFS/OS.
    • Other Local Therapies: SBRT, RFA, MWA for unresectable, residual, or new lesions.
  • Future Directions:
    • Liquid biopsies (ctDNA) for early detection & monitoring.
    • Advanced molecular profiling for personalized therapy selection.

⭐ The single most important prognostic factor for survival following metastasectomy is achieving a complete (R0) resection.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Metastasectomy: surgical resection of metastases, aiming for cure or improved survival.
  • Best for oligometastatic disease (limited number/sites of metastases).
  • Prognostic factors: disease-free interval (DFI), R0 resection, number/site of metastases.
  • Common sites: liver (colorectal cancer), lung (sarcoma, colorectal), brain.
  • Crucial selection: good performance status, controlled primary tumor.
  • Pulmonary metastasectomy: wedge resection common; R0 resection vital.
  • Liver metastasectomy: requires adequate future liver remnant (FLR).

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